Tuesday, June 06, 2006

London Times: The Origins of Anti-Americanism

Kathryn at the Corner points out this commentary in the Times of London. The writer asks, "So why are we all anti-Americans now?" The answer is not America's unilateralism.
The US is never less popular than when it is aroused and determined in defence of democratic freedoms, never less trusted than when the world is most reliant on its unmatched ability to project power.

Democracies are psychologically ill-adapted to open-ended confrontations where there can be no decisive victory, the essence of the effort to subdue global terrorism. Eternal vigilance is a wearisome business. The more vulnerable that Europeans feel, the more liable they are to shift blame across the Atlantic.

The strength of disdain is a measure of Europe’s weakness. Smugness is one of Europe’s great contemporary exports.
The writer goes on to say what Europeans forget about America:
We may all think that we know America, its music, its culture, its self-confident exceptionalism. We tend to forget that Americans fight only with extreme reluctance. We overlook their penchant for agonised self-criticism; everything bad we know about the US, we know because Americans inexhaustibly rehearse their society’s shortcomings. There has never been greater transparency, whether than on the battlefield or the boondocks, and there has never been more open debate about the country’s virtues and vices. . . .
Finally:
America-bashing may be a popular sport, but its adherents prefer not to contemplate its consequences.

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